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...Efficiency Program ScreeningsHilles Penthouse (SOCH)4 p.m.Solo Piano RecitalLowell House Junior Common Room4 p.m.The Dudley House OrchestraPaine Hall4 p.m.“Sichuan Triptych” Film Screening Carpenter Center4 p.m.De Boeck, Copland, NielsenPaine Hall4 p.m.The MatriarchsHarvard Hillel4:30 p.m.OndineCenter for European Studies5 p.m.“Ori mi Pe (My Head is Correct)” Film ScreeningCarpenter Center5 p.m.IGP’s Dinner Party ShowAdams House7:30 p.m.‘Tis a Pity She’s a WhoreLoeb Drama Center Experimental Theatre8 p.m.The MatriarchsHarvard Hillel 8 p.m.Bajo la arena…El públicoAdams House...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Arts First Events Listing | 5/1/2009 | See Source »

...Keller and Addate worried that we were misreading both the geologic and fossil records. They conducted surveys at numerous sites in Mexico, including a spot called El Peñón, near the impact crater. They were especially interested in a 30-ft. layer of sediment just above the iridium layer. That sediment, they calculate, was laid down at a rate of about 0.8 in. to 1.2 in. per thousand years, meaning that all 30 feet took 300,000 years to settle into place...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Maybe an Asteroid Didn't Kill the Dinosaurs | 4/27/2009 | See Source »

...asteroid. But since the new digs were so close to ground zero, the immediate species loss ought to be have been - if anything - greater there than anywhere else in the world. Instead, the animals seemed to escape unharmed. Other paleontologists, however, believe that the very proximity of El Peñón to the impact site makes the results even less reliable. Earthquakes and tsunamis that resulted from the collision could have wrought havoc on the sedimentary record, causing discrete strata to swirl together and completely scrambling time lines. Keller disagrees, pointing out that the slow accretion of sediment that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Maybe an Asteroid Didn't Kill the Dinosaurs | 4/27/2009 | See Source »

Stack fast enough and you can break a sweat. John Taylor, a PE teacher in Ohio, says he now integrates cup-stacking into more than half his classes, often as an incentive to get kids to participate in more-rigorous activities. "We have a relay where students will run 10 yards, then stack a pyramid," he says. "It makes exercise more fun for them." Can an Olympic debut be far behind...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Stacktacular: The Speedy World of Sport Stacking | 4/27/2009 | See Source »

After that, what you think of the industry's future depends on what you think has enabled it to make so much money in the past. The optimists argue that PE firms profit by being good at governing corporations. "When you've got overly ambitious and hardworking people who are putting their own money at risk," said Carlyle Group managing director David Rubenstein when I got him on the phone, "it's an alignment of interests with management and shareholders that will always enable private equity to make money...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Private Equity, the Giant Before the Bust, Hangs On | 4/2/2009 | See Source »

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